Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
It is clear that only the abolition of the state structure can solve a number of oppressions, not least in relation to undocumented migrants. This book invites us to think of emigration not only in the perspective that the world is our homeland, but also because this population movement is a character of dissent from the left of both countries in respect of the so-called home, as Banu Bargu suggests. In short this book does not fail to stir the debate it deserves. * Refractions *
This is a unique and exciting collection of inquiries into anarchism and political theory, anarchism as political theory. Martel and Klausen's introduction usefully situates anarchism in relation to contemporary political struggles. The authors make use of a wide variety of political theorists, including Foucault, Arendt, Benjamin, and Nietzsche, to discern and develop anarchist themes. -- Kathy Ferguson, Department of Political Science, University of Hawai'i
Rather than simply rehashing classical anarchism, this work offers a genuinely original and innovative re-engagement with the properly heterogeneous and heretical dimension of anarchist thought, emphasising its untimely timeliness. With the category of 'critical anarchism,' anarchism is taken beyond the epistemological boundaries of the old masters like Bakunin and Kropotkin, revitalized through a dialogue with alternative perspectives such as post-structuralism, and reconsidered in the context of today's struggles against neo-colonialism and global capitalism. Critical anarchism thus brings to light the diversity and liveliness of anarchism, showing that it is more productively thought as a horizon of becoming. Above all, in pointing to the potential of anarchism as an alternative to the failures of statism on the one hand, and capitalism on the other, the book reminds us of the original libertarian-egalitarian impulse at the heart of radical politics and thus makes a vital contribution to what I see as the fundamental political challenge of today: reclaiming the ethical project of how not to be governed from the grasp of the radical Right. -- Saul Newman, Professor of Political Theory, Goldsmiths, University of London
Fresh, brave, and excellent to think with. Nothing beats this as an original, critical and sympathetic reassessment of anarchism as a body of evolving emancipatory practices and as a body of knowledge. I can't wait to teach it. -- James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science and Anthropology, Yale University

Table of Contents
1 1. Introduction: "How Not to Be Governed" 2 2. Anarchist Methods and Political Theory 3 3. An Anarchism That Is Not Anarchism: Notes toward a Critique of Anarchist Imperialism 4 4. Beside the State: Anarchist Strains in Cuban Revolutionary Thought 5 5. Kant via Rancière: From Ethics to Anarchism 6 6. Nietzsche, Aristocratism and Non-domination 7 7. Max Stirner, Postanarchy avant la lettre 8 8. The late Foucault's premodernity 9 9. The ambivalent anarchism of Hannah Arendt 10 10. Emma Goldman and the Power of Revolutionary Love 11 11. "This is what Democracy looks like"

How Not to be Governed Readings and

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A Hardback by James Martel, Banu Bargu

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    Publisher: Lexington Books
    Publication Date: 1/13/2011 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780739150344, 978-0739150344
    ISBN10: 0739150340

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    It is clear that only the abolition of the state structure can solve a number of oppressions, not least in relation to undocumented migrants. This book invites us to think of emigration not only in the perspective that the world is our homeland, but also because this population movement is a character of dissent from the left of both countries in respect of the so-called home, as Banu Bargu suggests. In short this book does not fail to stir the debate it deserves. * Refractions *
    This is a unique and exciting collection of inquiries into anarchism and political theory, anarchism as political theory. Martel and Klausen's introduction usefully situates anarchism in relation to contemporary political struggles. The authors make use of a wide variety of political theorists, including Foucault, Arendt, Benjamin, and Nietzsche, to discern and develop anarchist themes. -- Kathy Ferguson, Department of Political Science, University of Hawai'i
    Rather than simply rehashing classical anarchism, this work offers a genuinely original and innovative re-engagement with the properly heterogeneous and heretical dimension of anarchist thought, emphasising its untimely timeliness. With the category of 'critical anarchism,' anarchism is taken beyond the epistemological boundaries of the old masters like Bakunin and Kropotkin, revitalized through a dialogue with alternative perspectives such as post-structuralism, and reconsidered in the context of today's struggles against neo-colonialism and global capitalism. Critical anarchism thus brings to light the diversity and liveliness of anarchism, showing that it is more productively thought as a horizon of becoming. Above all, in pointing to the potential of anarchism as an alternative to the failures of statism on the one hand, and capitalism on the other, the book reminds us of the original libertarian-egalitarian impulse at the heart of radical politics and thus makes a vital contribution to what I see as the fundamental political challenge of today: reclaiming the ethical project of how not to be governed from the grasp of the radical Right. -- Saul Newman, Professor of Political Theory, Goldsmiths, University of London
    Fresh, brave, and excellent to think with. Nothing beats this as an original, critical and sympathetic reassessment of anarchism as a body of evolving emancipatory practices and as a body of knowledge. I can't wait to teach it. -- James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science and Anthropology, Yale University

    Table of Contents
    1 1. Introduction: "How Not to Be Governed" 2 2. Anarchist Methods and Political Theory 3 3. An Anarchism That Is Not Anarchism: Notes toward a Critique of Anarchist Imperialism 4 4. Beside the State: Anarchist Strains in Cuban Revolutionary Thought 5 5. Kant via Rancière: From Ethics to Anarchism 6 6. Nietzsche, Aristocratism and Non-domination 7 7. Max Stirner, Postanarchy avant la lettre 8 8. The late Foucault's premodernity 9 9. The ambivalent anarchism of Hannah Arendt 10 10. Emma Goldman and the Power of Revolutionary Love 11 11. "This is what Democracy looks like"

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